On-demand tunable oxidation is performed during the nanoESI-MS analysis by varying the nanoflow rate and the initial droplet size. The oxidation is initiated when the electric field of the droplet reaches ∼1.3 V nm−1.
A bipolar
ESI source is developed to generate a simultaneous emission
of charged liquid jets of opposite polarity from an electrodeless
sprayer. The sprayer consists of two emitters, and the electrosprays
are initiated by applying a high potential difference (HV) across
the counter electrodes facing each emitter. The sprayer and the liquid
delivery system are made of all insulators without metal components,
thus enabling the total elimination of electrochemical reactions taking
place at the liquid–electrode interface in the typical electrosprayer.
The bipolar electrospray has been implemented using an online configuration
that uses a syringe pump for flow rate regulation and an offline configuration
that relies on HV for adjusting the flow rate. The voltage–current
and flow rate–current relationships of bipolar electrospray
were found to be similar to the standard electrospray. The application
of bipolar ESI to the mass spectrometry of protein, peptide, and metallocene
without electrochemically induced oxidation/reduction is demonstrated.
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